Rotting Hill

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by Lewis, Wyndham


  “My life,” he growled angrily, “has been rotten. I am taking up the monastic life as soon as I leave here.”

  “You are becoming a monk, Dr. Eldred!” cried the reporter, dancing with delight.

  “Perhaps a friar. It may be a friar.”

  “A friar!”

  “One of a mendicant order, yes.”

  “Would you beg in the streets, Dr. Eldred?”

  “That would be where I should beg.”

  And he crawled away dramatically, bumping the walls.

  The following evening Dr. McLachlan entered with a newspaper beneath his arm. In his fruitiest, throatiest “social” voice, and with his frostiest smile, he said, advancing airily—“I see, Dr. Eldred, that you are proposing to become a friar when you leave here.” He opened the paper and read: “If we are approached in Piccadilly by a gaunt austere figure in the dress of a Franciscan friar, and solicited for alms, that will be the great historian Dr. Eldred. He shuns the world as other men shun a contagious disease. But now, he tells your reporter, he is going a step farther. He can no longer tolerate even that degree of worldly contact; he spurns the comforts of his home in Rotting Gardens—he asserts, indeed, that he is tired of Rotting Hill and of our rotting life as well!”

  The doctor placed the open paper on his patient’s bed. There was the headline:

  GREAT HISTORIAN TO BECOME A MONK.

  Eldred shrank away from the shouting headline, pushing the newspaper away from him with horror. He whispered hoarsely: “That vile Fleet Street garbage fly I met in the corridor! Will you remove that yellow rag! I shall be sick. My stomach is not so strong as it was.”

  “Yes, but I suppose you did say something to the fellow, didn’t you!” The doctor, for once outraged by that humbug which he had learnt to expect of Eldred, registered disapproval in his unlaughing eye.

  “I told him that he stank!” Eldred shouted almost. Then dropping his voice dramatically: “But I said I stank too. I—do—stink.”

  Dr. McLachlan coughed.

  “I suppose I said something to him, to get rid of him. They are a pest, they poison my life with their lies.”

  The doctor looked very sceptical indeed, as he watched his theatrically writhing patient, but he said no more.

  VI

  Eldred had now been sixteen days in the nursing-home. The Matron, the nurse, and everybody else had When is he going written plainly upon their faces. But he showed no sign whatever of moving. There was nothing to prevent his going except his disinclination to take up his own life again where he had left it to have a lot of teeth extracted. In the end they were obliged practically to push him out. His doctor gave the first push, humorously of course.

  “If you wish to enter upon a monastic life,” McLachlan told him jocularly, “this is not the place for that. This is a nunnery.”

  He packed and left, but only after many representations had been made to him, to the effect that (1) he had now recovered and had even been seen running up the stairs; and (2) a queue of sick people was waiting for his room, and one was in a dying condition. So he had said farewell to Sister Bridget and Sister Giles, and to the Matron, with great emotion, and, after a convalescence was back in Rotting Gardens. The house had been redecorated inside and out. Black was the predominant colour.

  Miss Cosway sat in her office as usual. She was dressed in what amounted to a black uniform. She looked very despondent. Black did not suit her, she considered; formerly she had shown a taste for gayish frocks. Also she liked the bustle of life. But the bustle of life had ebbed from Rotting Gardens. As Eldred no longer spent the major part of the day writing letters and telephoning, letters had stopped pouring in at the letter-box. As to the telephone, it sometimes stood there silent for hours together. For that reason Miss Cosway jumped slightly as it now burst into life, with its loud cross bell. The call was from Evan Jones. Miss Cosway said “Oh, yes” as she heard the name. She was disappointed. Naturally she took her tone from her employer, who exhibited a submissive weariness when anyone was announced, but added a kind brave smile when it was Evan Jones. However, after a short absence from the telephone she informed Jones austerely that the doctor would see him at six the following day.

  The tall figure in shabby black that entered Eldred’s study punctually at six was far more monastic in appearance than Eldred could ever manage to look, with his leathery lawyer’s face, though this would not be for want of trying.

  The visitor sat down in the same chair as upon his earlier visit, when he had expounded the risks inherent in commerce with Doctors (M.D.).

  “You appear to have escaped injury,” he observed. “At least physical.”

  “Ah, yes, that was only an affair of teeth. Just a little dental show, doctors in secondary roles.”

  “Dentists are not greatly to be feared. They can break your jaw. That is all.”

  “They cannot do much more than break your jaw. My dentist was the O’Toole. He left my jaw intact. But then I did not tread on the tail of his coat.”

  “Good.”

  “Yes.”

  There was a silence, during which they both looked at one another. In each case their thoughts were uncomplimentary. Jones noticed that the Buddha had been removed. In its place was a large engraving of a Madonna. He turned away his head, watched by Eldred. He then found himself looking at a Descent from the Cross.

  “Are you,” he enquired, “for Grasmere or for Ambleside?”

  With a smile of hawk-like sweetness, of an overbearing and superior douceur, his head inclined as if condescending to a child, Eldred said: “What is that, Evan? What is Grasmere?”

  The visitor shrugged his shoulder.

  “Grasmere? I see you have not read what has happened in connection with the centenary of Wordsworth’s death.”

  “Has there been a centenary?”

  “You are so out of the world! The newspapers have been splashing it as if it were a child-murder by an erotic homicide. You see the people of Grasmere, and those of Ambleside, both claim that the authentic Wordsworth Shrine is their town (or is it village). Celebrations have gone on simultaneously in both places, with mutual recriminations and denunciations, in which members of parliament and archbishops have been involved. It is, I imagine, a matter of the first importance to the hotel-keepers, lodging-house keepers, garage-proprietors, caterers, and tradesmen of the rival communities. It is a case of a shy little ‘violet by a mossy stone half-hidden from the eye’ no more. Yet it had to hide behind the mossy stone in the first instance… just as ‘trade follows the Flag’.”

  “I suppose so,” said Eldred politely, twirling his thumbs and gazing at his visitor as if the latter had been vitreous and as if glassiness bored him. He, of course, had read the newspaper reports of the Wordsworth Centenary disturbance and, while he read, had speculated as to whether the people of Rotting Hill would be the victors when it came to his centenary. He would put his money on the Rotters, though his birthplace would no doubt put up a good fight and do all they could to attract pilgrims: though his birthplace was frankly a repulsive spot and he doubted whether more than a few hundred devotees would collect there. It was such problems as these that he was turning over in his mind when his visitor began speaking again. He then listened, twirling his thumbs at top speed.

  “It is generally agreed, I suppose, that Wordsworth was one of those men who outlive their genius. As a young man he preferred human liberty as understood by the men of the French Revolution to the hypocritical liberties of the Anglo-Saxon middle class.”

  “Rubbish.”

  “I beg your pardon? A commonplace or a conventional man outliving a bit of vision—for the great visionaries see ‘the light that never was’ to the end—a worldly person who has been visited by some muse in error, naturally exploits this visitation for ever afterwards, like some little businessman. When the age of poetry was over the prosy old moralist naturally proceeded to exploit his dead self just as one hundred years later the Grasmerites and Ambleside
rs are doing, who follow his example to the letter. ‘Greatness’ is at times a sweet racket. Some are the pioneers of the racket growing up around their dead virtue. They build their own Shrine—when their genius has departed. A Shrine-builder of this sort always builds a sham or phoney Shrine. Victor Hugo, for instance, was really all Shrine. It would not be fair to mention Tolstoy in the same breath with Wordsworth…”

  “Have you ever read Wordsworth?” Eldred said tonelessly, looking away. But his visitor understood that unwittingly he had been treading on someone’s toes—or perhaps trespassing on someone’s Shrine!

  “Yes.” Jones nodded. “I read him last night.” Then he changed the subject: only his choice of a subject was unfortunate. He spoke, and in somewhat partisan terms, of the Crusade to Prevent a Third World War. Eldred grew more and more remote, until at one moment Jones actually registered the sensation of being alone in the room.

  It had not taken this very observant visitor long to realize that Paul was pretending to be a new Paul. He would, he felt certain, have given a fruity belly-jeer at a certain moment, packed with insult, had he not superannuated his abdominal Jeer, which was a revolutionary step. It had not been lost on him, either, that Eldred had been conducting himself as though his visitor had been a large piece of animated glass. Needless to say the twirling of the thumbs had been remarked and marvelled at: he had attempted to assign a cause—unsuccessfully. What impressed him most forcibly, however, was that Paul Eldred was elsewhere (realizing of course that it was in all probability a deliberate absence): successfully self-abstracted.

  Eldred had acquired so skilfully what he interpreted as the nun’s technique of self-abstraction, that everyone he came in contact with now felt he was not really there, or uncomfortably remote. Evan Jones found it so oppressive that his stay was an unusually short one. As was his custom he rather abruptly rose. For a moment he stood looking down on his oldest friend, not unaffectionately.

  “Paul, are you becoming a monk, as the newspapers say you are?”

  “No,” Eldred answered carelessly. “That is just a silly lie.”

  “Whose?” was all that Evan Jones said, as he moved towards the door, in a tone that indicated he did not expect an answer. As he descended the steps of 27 Rotting Gardens he communed with himself almost thinking aloud: “I can take old Paul neat, I can take him with soda, I can take him with tonic, orange, or lime, and I can even take him, and often have, with vinegar. I fear I cannot take him with holy water. That is an innovation against which my stomach rebels.” A fire-engine rushed across Rotting Gardens. It brought instant relief, it released something which had got obstructed somewhere within, and Jones’s eyes shone again. “Thank Beelzebub there is a fire somewhere!” was what he thought as, smiling, he stepped briskly away.

  5. Time the Tiger

  I

  It was, as usual in London about that time of the year, endeavouring to snow. There had been a hard frost for days, in fact it was so cold that in any other country it would have snowed long ago. The sky was a constipated mass, yellowed by the fog, suspended over a city awaiting the Deluge. It was eight-thirty in the morning. The streets of Rotting Hill were like Pompeii with Vesuvius in catastrophic eruption, a dull glare, saffronish in colour, providing an unearthly uniformity. The self-centred precipitancy of the bowed pedestrians resembled a procession of fugitives.

  Mark Robins was standing at his bathroom window. His eye followed with displeasure the absurdly ominous figures moving under mass-pressure to be there at nine o’clock, passing on through the hollow twilit streets towards the swarming undergrounds. It was the urgency that jarred, their will-to-live as a machine.

  He could see into the lighted baker’s shop. The lady known in his private mind as “bum-face” arranged yesterday’s and of course the day before yesterday’s pastry in the window. Whenever he saw the old pastries ranged in the window he thought of that air of uprightness and invincible integrity owned by the little master-baker. Why were his loaves the least white, the greyest, of any in Rotting Hill? He held very strong opinions on the subject of the socialist administration: perhaps cause and effect. His bread became as hard as a brick within forty-eight hours. It became like that in the stomach too if you failed to expel it promptly. This baker’s views on the socialist government were as forcible as a pick-pocket’s are regarding the police force, only the baker’s had the added force of moral indignation.

  Then, as Mark idly watched, “Fringe” (in his private mind she was known as that) erect and white in her chemist’s uniform, came out of Willough’s. She moved like clockwork, as steady as the swan on the surface of the lake. Whenever she turned she turned abruptly at right-angles with the precision of a Royal Marine. She had been a she-soldier. Mark approved of “Fringe”, and regretfully noted how she stopped, pivoted to face at right-angles, and entered the baker’s shop (as she did every morning) and selected an ageing pastry. However, she worked in a chemist’s and no doubt kept her bowels open.

  In several windows of the lofty Victorian houses—all Private Hotels—where the diligent refugees of Rotting Hill were already at work on their biographies of Goethe or of Meyerbeer, there was electric light. The silversmith and diamond merchant was (typical of his class! thought Mark) the latest riser of the tradesmen of Rotting Hill. The last snores of the night blew out of his nostrils upon the little fluttery moustache as his head lay on the pillow beside that of Mrs. Silversmith. Both the Silversmiths and Mark had a low opinion of the other’s morale: their flats so situated that nothing that went on in one was exactly a closed book for the other—especially in view of the prohibitive cost of material for curtains and the veils that in happier times shroud our domestic interiors.

  Mark withdrew from the window. He sighed. He did not know why he sighed. But a large white “Ascot heater” stood in a corner of the bathroom which no longer produced hot water. Three months earlier the mechanic of the gas service had called for the routine clean-up. Since then it had been out of action. Mark boiled some water in the kitchen and washed: then he filled the kettle again, and again put it on to boil. After that he went to his guest’s room, knocked at the door, and put his head inside.

  “Charles! Stop dreaming and get up. I have put some water on to boil for you.”

  “Thank you, Mark. Whooah!” Charles yawned.

  “You slept well?”

  “Perfectly.”

  “Good.”

  “Whooah.”

  As he went to his room Mark was smiling. “Whooah!” was so like Charles. Seeing Charles in bed “whooahing” had caused him for some reason to think of Ida Dyat, Charles’s sister. He thought of her, as he always did, in repose. Action was not her element: so, though on horseback her hair was dramatic as a maenad’s, he preferred to think of the stationary cloud of dull gold as she lay back in an armchair reading a book. The indolent red lips he would see for preference at their most indolent, when she had been too lazy to smile and had smiled with her eyes instead—which was less trouble. Her beauty was preraphaelite at its best, brooding or dreaming in some equivalent of the mirror of the Lady of Shalott.

  It was a certain inactivity in Ida’s composition which attracted him most, and it was that, too, that accounted for his romantic attachment remaining in a state of abortive repression, contained within the forms of youthful camaraderie: Mark being one of those men who needed, if not to be hunted by the female, at least to be reminded that women are sexual phenomena. But always a warm wind from the past rushed into his mind when he had, as now, these images

  of her. Then the image suddenly dissolved, his smile faded. For Ida must be a hag of forty-five, he thought. Thinking of Ida as greying and pathetic was so immensely distasteful that he began moving quickly and noisily about. Old Charles stopped young though, he thought. “Whooah.” Mark smiled again.

  But he soon forgot Charles’s sea-lion cry, for he became grimly absorbed in dressing. His bedroom was a far more efficient refrigerator than the “Ascot heater” was
a heater. However, the Briton regards chilliness as next to godliness. Mark would have been quite as displeased had the refrigerator failed as he had been at the defection of the “heater”.

  Taking a fresh shirt out of the drawer he identified it—as the one with the smallest buttonholes of any. This abnormality was revealed by all new shirts to some degree. With the shirt in question the buttons refused to go in. Each buttonhole had to be forcibly entered, the one at the top entailing as much sometimes as five minutes strenuous thumbing. Unquestionably this afforded him that grim satisfaction the Briton experiences when senseless obstacles are placed in his way or life bristles with purposeful mischance, all food for his “grit”. But in this case there was another factor: namely the credit and good name of a socialist Britain. Probably it would prove a better advertisement if British manufacturers turned out serviceable shirts—easy to button up and with such conveniences as are prized by self-indulgent foreigners. It was like our taxation. Few foreigners understood that. Taxes such as we can stand up to would cause a revolution anywhere else. Only we have the guts to “take it”. Besides, the obvious explanation of the smallness of these buttonholes aroused Mark’s party-zeal: the motive was profit. It saved labour and time in the factory to make them small. It was a relief to one’s feelings to reflect that the days were numbered of “free enterprise” shirt manufacture.

  Even the best shirts tended to shrink and the buttonholes lost width in the wash quite as much as the sleeves lost length, if only a little. But the button naturally was unaffected. Any slight dilation of the buttonholes attendant upon the constant passage, in and out, of the button, was less than its shrinkage in the wash. It had of course occurred to Mark to purchase a few dozen shirt buttons, smaller than those on the shirt. But although there were many sorts of buttons in the shops, shirt-buttons (oddly enough) were practically unobtainable.

  As he pulled on a sock one of his fingernails caught in the wool. With an almost new pair of nail-scissors he attempted to cut off the chipped nail. But the scissors were already loose and of a metal formerly unknown to cutlery. The nail was bent by them, it was not severed. He fell back on his nail-file. After a little he gave that up, and stuck a band-aid over the nail.

 

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